Selecting a Suitable Heatsink

Selecting a Suitable Heatsink
of 7 to 8 Arms depending on the panel
material, ambient temperature, etc. In
these cases it is absolutely essential to
mount the relay to an un painted
surface and use a good thermal
compound. As a rule, the minimum
per relay panel area should be 25
square inches.
However, the thermal impedance from
baseplate to heatsink is determined by
the assembly procedure used. It is
important that the surface to which the
relay is being assembled is clean, flat,
bare metal (NOT PAINTED). If an
anodized aluminum heatsink is used,
the thermal impedance of the anodized
surface may be acceptable, depending
on the thickness of the anodize.
Above these current levels some form
of heatsink will be required. Determine
heatsink thermal impedance using
rating curves like those shown in Fig 1.
In order to maintain an acceptable
power switch junction temperature,
some form of heatsink must dissipate
the heat generated by the power loss.
For most printed circuit board types,
the relay current rating is established
by measuring the thermal impedance,
from the dissipating elements to air,
using the relay package as the heat
sink. Some printed circuit board types
are available with an integral heatsink;
their ratings reflect the additional
effects of the integral heatsink.
A thermal compound (or thermal pad)
is
needed
to
minimize
the
baseplate-to
heatsink
thermal
impedance. In general a thermal
compound will give the lowest thermal
impedance, but it is very important to
use a minimum of thermal compound –
too much is almost as bad as none at
all. One widely used technique is to
apply a thin layer of compound and
then apply pressure to the relay while
rotating it back and forth to squeeze
any excess compound out before
attaching the relay to the mounting
surface.
Panel mount relays usually require an
external heatsink. The electrical
analogy shown below identifies the
In some applications the relay will be
mounted directly to a panel. This
technique will work up to load currents
Power
Switch
Junction
Relay
Baseplate
Thermal Impedance
Junction to Baseplate
Heatsink
Thermal Impedance
Baseplate to Heatsink
Thermal Impedance
Heatsink to Air
Air
50A
60
1°C/W
.5ºC/W
90
1.5ºC/W
40
100
2ºC/W
110
20
120
NO HEATSINK
0
10
20 30
40
50 20
40
60
Load Current [Arms Max Ambient Temp. [ºC]
Base Plate Temp [ºC]
Obviously the junction temperature Tj
can be calculated if the power
dissipation is known. The normal
maximum
allowable
junction
temperature
is
125
degrees
Centigrade. Most designs are based on
providing a 10 degree Centigrade
safety margin and use a heat sink to
keep the junction temperature to 115
degrees Centigrade.
primary thermal impedances in the
path from junction to ambient air:
Tj = Power x (sum of thermal
impedances) The relay manufacturer
provides the thermal impedance
junction to baseplate, and the heatsink
manufacturer provides the thermal
impedance heatsink to air.
Power Dissipation
Due to the forward voltage drop of the
output SCRs, solid state relays
generate an internal power loss. The
amount of power generated is
a function of the load current. The
manufacturer provides power loss
curves, as shown in Fig 1. At normal
load currents the power loss can be
estimated at 1 Watt for every 1 Arms of
load current.
80
Fig 1
The figure shown is for a 50 Arms rated
relay. Assume the load current is
30Arms, then in the left hand side of the
curve the power dissipated is seen to
be 31 Watts.
Reading across to the heatsink versus
ambient temperature curves shows
that an ambient of 40 degrees
Centigrade requires a heatsink with a
thermal impedance of 2 degrees
Centigrade per Watt. However,
to reduce the junction temperature to
approximately
115
degrees
Centigrade, a heatsink of about 1.5
degrees Centigrade would be more
suitable. If the point of 31 Watts
dissipation is read all the way to the
right, then the maximum allowable
baseplate temperature is shown for a
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junction temperature of 125 degrees
Centigrade. In the example discussed,
this is 106 degrees Centigrade. However, to allow for the 10 degrees Centigrade safety factor, the baseplate
temperature should not exceed 96
degrees Centigrade.
There are many sources for heat sinks,
enabling designers to select one most
suitable thermally and mechanically for
the application.
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